Posts Tagged ‘politics’

With Barack Obama’s incredible campaign success, I thought I’d kick off this blog by looking at how they used social media so successfully – esp as it’s the first US presidential campaign to make such widespread use of the Internet. To begin with they have a pretty impressive website http://www.barackobama.comwith very clear and rich information, and easy to use navigation. The site includes videos, photos, a blog, and embeds content from social media channels.

The use of social media was pretty extensive, including:

Twitter– Obama is the most followed twitter account (with 117,025 followers vs 71,000 for the 2nd most followed)

YouTube– over 1600 videos

Over 50,000 photos onFlickr

Facebookpages,MySpacepages,LinkedIn,Meetup,FriendFeed

All of this is very impressive, especially the sheer volume of content and connections. But, I think the driving force that brough it all together was the MyBarackObama.com“MyBO” community platform created by http://www.bluestatedigital.com – a personalized space for campaign coordinators to collaborate with supporters. It is a truelyempowering collaboration sitethat helped people totake ownership of campaign activities– something I feel made a big difference in the success of the site.

MyBO allows people to:

Create their ownprofiles, with personal details, including why they support Obama.

Create andjoin groups(over 20,000 different groups) to connect with local people, or others with a shared interest (single mothers, air traffic controllers, etc).

Easilycontact voters– a feature that automatically finds local potential supporters to contact, based on your address; creates a printout of address/call list with names, script for conversation, and a map of where they live; report back feature for campaign office to track results. Very impressive way to easily coordinate volunteer campaign supporters with a minimal amount of effort needed from the volunteer (they can do it from the comfort of their own home).

Setup a personalblog to share their own comments and views (not many sites allow visitors to setup their own blog & publish their own content).

Post or viewcampaign events – the locations, details, help needed, etc for local community campaigns or rallys

Personal fundraising page– the ability to setup and customize a personal page; send personal invites to people (with a default but customizable message); track how much support you have brought into the campaign; automatic aggregation of all personal pages for the campaign HQ.

These impressive collection of tools made it easy for people to connect with and collaborate with other supporters; and for the campaign coordinators to not only drive and steer the efforts of others, but toempower people to take action on their own. The site also provides an excellent crossover between online and offline activities – using tools to organize and drive campaign efforts for phone campaigns; in-person meetings and rallys; postering; door-to-door campaigns, etc. The site also focuses people’s efforts at mobilizing volunteers to get out there and talk to people who are not already supporters (instead of making a space for existing supporters to talk amongst themselves without reaching out to others). MyBO provides the groundwork messages, values, and ideas of the campaign, and helps people integrate them into their own message, andempowers people to spread the ideas as their own message. One final feature – donation matching – created a connection between first time donators and new donators, promoting dialogue between established and new supports to discuss why each of them donated, their beliefs, values, etc – a way to further solidify support for Obama.MyBO proved to be very successful:

Over 1 Million people created a user account

Over 75,000 campaign events were organized or promoted through MyBO

Donation efforts helped raise over $250 Million

A final thought… social media/web 2.0 is not just about making it easier to connect people to each other, it’s aboutempowerment – to create, to take ownership, to have control.